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All Saints Church, Grangegorman

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Country
  
Republic of Ireland

Founded
  
1828

Archdeacon
  
David Pierpoint

Architect
  
John Semple

Denomination
  
Church of Ireland

Dedication
  
All Saints

Province
  
Leinster

Location
  
Phibsborough Road, Dublin

Address
  
Phibsborough Rd, Phibsborough, Dublin 7, Ireland

Diocese
  
Anglican Diocese of Dublin and Glendalough

Similar
  
All Saints' Church - Raheny, Christ Church - Bray, St Werburgh's Church, St Bartholomew's Church, St Catherine's Church

All Saints Church, Grangegorman is a Church of Ireland church located in Dublin, Ireland. It was built in 1828 according to the designs put forward by John Semple and formed as a parish in 1829 from the areas of St. Michan's and St. Paul's. It is a constituent member of the Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin Parish Group alongside St. Michan's Church, Dublin and St. Werburgh's Church, Dublin. This church in noteworthy on the basis that it is numbered among the first in Ireland to worship according to Tractarian Principles and was the subject of protest and sanction by the Protestant community in Ireland in the 19th century.

Contents

Architecture

The church, originally designed by John Semple, was later remodelled by Thomas Drew between 1856-1889 according to Tractarian principles. This amounted to the redesign of the chancel in 1856 and the addition of the baptistery in 1889. The church also boasts a fine number of stained glass windows designed by A. L. Moore installed during the 1880s and 1890s. The church was devastated by fire in 1966 and a number of notable features were lost including the 19th century roofing.

Monuments

In 1920 a triptych war memorial was installed to commemorate those members of the parish who died in war. On the Southward facing external wall of the church a panel depicting St. Michael, by An Túr Gloine artist Ethel Rhind, was installed in 1921 associated with a World War I memorial located within the Church. At the back of the church a memorial to George Tyrrell was installed. Born into the community of All Saints, he later converted to Roman Catholicism and was ordained as a Jesuit priest before being excommunicated for modernist views challenging, amongst others, the doctrine of Papal Infallibility. When he was denied a Catholic burial the community of All Saints facilitated his funeral.

Parish

All Saints church, Grangegorman is a member of the Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin Parish Group along with St. Michan's Church, Dublin and St. Werburgh's Church, Dublin. The parish is considered as among the first Church of Ireland parishes to align itself with the Anglo-Catholic Movement or Oxford Movement along Tractarian principles. The small instances of ritualism, incomparable with that represented in England at the time, generated protests and led to 'a fiery mob of young men' breaking up the services offered within the church on some occasions. Depicting the demise of the Oxford Movement in Ireland, Tyrrell wrote that the curiosity exhibited among the Dublin intellectual scene and among those graduates of Trinity College, Dublin had worn off in the face of Home Rule.

Organ

The organ was built by the firm Telford and Telford towards the end of the nineteenth century and was originally located in St. Philip's church, Milltown. It was later relocated to the church of St. Mary, Mary Street before finally being transferred to its current location in 1986.

Church choir

Consistent with the Anglo-Catholic principles of the ritual of All Saints church, the choir consists of robed adults and children who, 'lend their voice to the adornment of the Sacraments and Other Rites and Ceremonies to the use of the Church of Ireland for the purpose of the worship of the Lord in the beauty of holiness and the edification of the people'. The choir traces its origins from the earliest days of the parish and records indicate that, while adult members were volunteers, the children were paid. It is reported that during the 1940s the children went on strike in pursuit of higher salaries. The principle repertoire of the choir is Gregorian Chant while also encompassing polyphonic and contemporary works in accordance with the altered dynamic of the parish.

References

All Saints Church, Grangegorman Wikipedia